La Línea (Road Pass)

For other uses, see La Linea (disambiguation).

La Línea (English: The Line) is a highway tunnel currently under construction between the cities of Calarcá, Quindío and Cajamarca, Tolima in Colombia. It will cross beneath the locally famous "Alto de La Línea" in the Cordillera Central or central range of the Andes mountains, easing traffic on one of Colombia's main east-west road connections (the National Route 40) which links Bogotá with Cali and the Pacific port of Buenaventura. It will be the longest road tunnel in Latin America.[1] The total length of the tunnel will be 8,652 metres, its western entrance being at 2,420 metres above msl, 19 kilometres east of the city of Armenia and the eastern one at 2,505 metres above msl, at 37.8 kilometres west of Ibagué.[2] Constructions of the pilot tunnel started on 30 September 2004 and both sides of the pilot met on 2 August 2008.[3] In September 2007 Ministry of Transport launched the tender process for the construction of tunnel and connecting roads.[4] Construction work started in December 2008 and is expected to finish in 2016.[5][6]

Benefits

Trajectory of the planned tunnel.

Some of the benefits include lower operation costs ($37 Million US in the first year), shorter travel time and reduction in the number of accidents. Due to the difficult terrain that will be avoided, $37 million US should be saved in operating costs in the first year. Furthermore, travel time will decrease as average speed increases from its current 18.2 kilometers/hour to 60 kilometers/hour. For heavy vehicles, travel times can be decreased by 80 minutes, and 40 minutes for light vehicles. This section is also currently one of the stretches in the country most prone to accidents (four times the national average) due to its geography and climate. The tunnel could bring the stretch down to the average. Total economic benefits are estimated to be $40 million US per annum. The construction of the tunnel was stop due to the discovery of the biggest gold deposit ever found in Colombian history, while construction workers were digging the tunnel.

References

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